70 Ind. App. 674 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1919
This was an action by the appellee city of Indianapolis against the appellant Home Brewing Company commenced in the Marion Circuit Court, and finally tried on change of venue in the Shelby Circuit Court. It was to recover $2,000, with interest and costs, which the city of Indianapolis had paid upon a judgment for that amount which one Mat-. tie Crawford had obtained against the city as damages for injuries received when she stepped into a depression in the sidewalk in front of lands in Indianapolis owned by the appellant.
The complaint is in substance as follows: The appellant was a corporation engaged in the manufacture and sale of various kinds of beer, and as a part of its operations- owned land in the city of Indianapolis, described as 39 South Delaware street, which it occupied with a saloon. On September 5, 1913, Mattie Crawford was injured by means of a defect in the sidewalk immediately in front of said lands by stepping into such defective place, which was about two feet long, a foot and a half wide, and two or three
The cause was first submitted to a jury for trial, which disagreed and was discharged, and thereafter on change of venue the cause was sent to the Shelby Circuit Court, where there was a.trial by jury, which returned a verdict in favor of the appellee and against the appellant for $2,245.23. The jury also answered interrogatories submitted to it, which, in narrative form, found the following facts:
On September 5, 1913, there was a hole in the east sidewalk of South Delaware street in the city of Indianapolis, Indiana, in front of the premises known as 39 South Delaware street, which was two feet long, one foot and a half wide, and three inches deep at its deepest point, which was in the middle. It sloped up from the deepest point to the edge. This hole started to wear in the sidewalk about four years before September 5, 1913*, and gradually grew larger from wear until said date. It was about six inches west of an elevator used for lowering beer and other articles to the basement of said premises. The level of -the elevator when raised was about six inches above the sidewalk level. The premises were occupied by Christian Eeis, and had been so occupied by him for eight years prior thereto, for saloon purposes. Said Eeis
In loading and unloading said elevator it was necessary to use the sidewalk of said Delaware street at the spot where the hole complained of was worn. The appellee was sued February 14, 1914, having been notified of the accident in November, 1913. The appellee undertook to defend such suit, first notifying
The appellant filed its motion for judgment in its favor on the interrogatories and answers thereto, notwithstanding the general verdict, and thereafter within thirty days filed its motion for a new trial. The court overruled appellant’s motion for judgment on answers to interrogatories, and also overruled its motion for a new trial, and thereupon entered judgment in favor of the appellee, and appellant now prosecutes this appeal from said judgment.
If a city sidewalk is rendered unsafe by the wrongful act or negligence of a third party, and the city, by
It appears by the answers to interrogatories that the appellant had not made an improper or wrongful use of the sidewalk, and, it not being appellant’s duty to repair the same, appellant’s motion for judgment in its favor upon .the answers to interrogatories should have been sustained.
The judgment is reversed, with instructions to the trial court to sustain appellant’s motion for judgment on the answers to interrogatories.